Anti-Colonialism Versus Self-Determination

Author:

Paranzino Michelle1

Affiliation:

1. Strategy & Policy Department, US Naval War College, Newport, RI, USA

Abstract

Abstract The 1982 Falklands/Malvinas conflict pitted two of the most foundational principles of postwar international relations—anti-colonialism and self-determination—against each other, creating dilemmas for the great powers and smaller states alike in determining where to place their loyalties. The British consistently upheld the self-determination of the islanders, while portraying the war as a struggle between the forces of democracy and those of dictatorship. Though the United States strove for the appearance of neutrality, support for the United Kingdom resulted in the effective abandonment of the anti-colonialism of the Monroe Doctrine. The Soviet Union viewed the war as an anachronistic return to open imperialist aggression, and backed the fiercely anti-communist military junta in Argentina, even as it waged what was viewed as a “third world war” against the transnational forces of Marxism-Leninism. Meanwhile, the countries of the Western Hemisphere polarised into Latin American demands for decolonisation and the devotion of the Anglophone Caribbean to the principle of self-determination. This division was reflected in the debates and resolutions of the Organization of American States, the Non-Aligned Movement, and the United Nations.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

History

Reference45 articles.

1. Argentina: god posle mal’vinskogo konflikta” [“Аргентина: год после мальвинского конфликта”];Antjasov, V.M.,1983

2. Argentina, the United States, and the Anti-Communist Crusade in Central America, 1977–1984;Armony, Ariel,1997

3. The Falkland Islands as an International Problem;Beck, Peter,1988

4. Latin America’s Cold War;Brands, Hal,2010

5. The Brest-Litovsk Moment: Self-Determination Discourse in Eastern Europe before Wilsonianism.;Chernev, Borislav,2011

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